Saving a vibrant history, one frame at a time
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, December 25, 2024


Saving a vibrant history, one frame at a time
Shahid Zaidi at his studio in Lahore, Pakistan, on June 16, 2021, where his father captured the country’s leaders and regular customers alike. Zaidi is working to preserve the photos his father shot of Pakistan’s first leaders and of its people in the era of the country’s founding. Betsy Joles/The New York Times.

by Betsy Joles



LAHORE.- Before Shahid Zaidi was born, before his home was an independent country, his father opened a portrait studio and captured the nation’s emerging history.

His father, Syed Mohammad Ali Zaidi, captured a Hindu couple in 1939. The man wore a conservative double-breasted suit, hair slicked, while the woman sported a sari, with earrings dangling and bangles on her wrists, the exact colors eluding the black-and-white negative.

The next year he captured a Muslim couple, listed as Mr. and Mrs. Mohammad Abbas, the bride in a shimmer-trimmed shalwar kameez and a matha patti, an ornamental headpiece, and the groom resplendent in a qulla, a wedding turban.

Word spread about his studio, and Syed Mohammed Ali Zaidi’s customers began to include the elite of the new nation of Pakistan. He photographed Muhammad Ali Jinnah, a lawyer turned separatist who became the modern country’s founder. He photographed Liaquat Ali Khan, the first prime minister, who was cut down by an assassin’s bullets in 1951.

Shahid Zaidi, 79, wants to preserve that history. He has assembled a small team to create digital versions of the images his father began capturing at his studio in Lahore 91 years ago. He aims to put the complete collection online so that families can find their ancestors and explore Pakistan’s coming-of-age.

“It’s my responsibility,” said Zaidi. “We have images that belong to somebody. They may want them or never want them. That’s beside the point. As far as I’m concerned, I owe them something.”

It won’t be easy. The studio, called Zaidis Photographers, houses an extensive archive of around a half-million negatives. Although he won some financial support from the U.S. Institute of Peace, which promotes conflict resolution, he is funding the rest himself.

The elder Zaidi opened the studio in 1930, when he rented a piece of prime real estate on The Mall, a British-era thoroughfare in Pakistan’s second-largest city. Despite its sought-after location, the studio struggled to find customers in a tough economy.




The elder Zaidi “had the courage, the commitment and the wisdom to do this when he had nothing else,” said Shahid Zaidi, who grew up in the studio.

Shahid Zaidi left for London as a young man to study film. He returned to Pakistan with his wife, Farida, in a Volkswagen bus, almost bartering his Leica camera in Tehran, Iran, in exchange for gas. The pair later moved to Reno, Nevada, where Zaidi worked as a director of photography for a studio portraiture company.

When his cousin, who had been running the studio, called Zaidi in the 1980s to ask him to take over the business, he felt he had to return. “There was something in me telling me, ‘You’ve got to go back,’ ” he said. “‘That’s your father’s work.’”

Zaidi and two young colleagues photograph each negative with a digital camera and add names, dates and watermarks to the files, drawing from stacks of notebooks where customers wrote their personal information by hand.

When he travels around Pakistan, Zaidi said, he meets people whose family histories are connected to the studio. “There’s always some kind of a story relating to some photographs that were taken by us,” he said.

Today the studio is flanked by chain restaurants and a luxury watch shop. The studio’s archival effort has progressed in fits and starts, depending on the amount of funding available. Keeping a portrait business open in an era of ubiquitous selfies isn’t easy, Zaidi said. He admits he hasn’t fully kept up with the times because changes in photography and Pakistani society don’t sit right with him. He shoots with a digital camera but prefers the style and format of his old, analog setup.

If he doesn’t finish preserving the photos, Zaidi said, he fears history will be lost. To his knowledge, few of his father’s contemporaries preserved their archives.

“Every day that I spend over here,” Zaidi said, “I learn something of what he went through to achieve what he did.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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